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       Alberta First Nations health centre will join study aiming to get
       people tested for syphilis
        
 (HTM) Source
        
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       Health officials are teaming up to make syphilis testing more
       accessible to people living in central Alberta as the province
       grapples with a worsening years-long outbreak of the serious sexually
       transmitted infection.
        
       Dr. Ameeta Singh, an infectious disease specialist and clinical
       professor of medicine at the University of Alberta, oversaw a 19-month
       clinical trial of a rapid test to quickly and easily test people for
       both syphilis and HIV.
        
       The test, which was 98 per cent accurate in detecting active syphilis
       and 100 per cent accurate in detecting HIV, was approved by Health
       Canada in March 2023.
        
       Now, Singh has received $400,000 in federal funding to explore
       different ways of reaching — and testing — people potentially affected
       by syphilis and HIV. Some of the work will happen in Maskwacis, about
       85 kilometres south of Edmonton, one of Alberta's largest First
       Nations communities.
        
       "This test kit that we're using provides a preliminary result for
       syphilis in less than a minute," Singh told CBC's _Radio Active_.
        
       "It's very exciting because it provides the opportunity to provide
       treatment right there and then in a single visit, instead of having to
       have the person come back for follow-up."
        
       ## Rapid results, fast intervention
        
       Syphilis, a sexually transmitted infection (STI), can lead to
       significant health issues if left untreated, including brain, heart
       and nerve complications. Pregnant people who aren't treated can
       transmit the infection to their fetus — called congenital syphilis —
       that could lead to health issues for the child, including stillbirth.
        
       There have been 19 infants born with congenital syphilis in the
       Maskwacis region since 2018, including three stillborns, Singh noted
       in the research proposal, approved by the Canadian Institutes of
       Health Research (CIHR) in April.
        
       Singh said the rapid tests would help protect people's health.
        
       Treatment can cure the STI and, in the case of pregnancy, prevent
       harmful outcomes for the baby. Diagnosis will also help stop the
       spread to other people.
        
       Syphilis rates have been spiking across Canada and internationally,
       recently reaching levels not seen since the 1940s.
        
       Alberta, in particular, has become a hotspot. The ongoing outbreak was
       first declared in 2019; provincial data shows infectious syphilis
       cases have risen each year for nearly a decade.
        
       In 2021, Alberta recorded more than 3,200 cases — the most in Canada,
       according to federal government statistics. In 2022, the most recent
       year for which syphilis statistics are available, Alberta health
       officials recorded nearly 3,330 cases — second behind Ontario, which
       reported about 3,440 cases.
        
       "This infection is an old infection," Singh said.
        
       "It should have gone away, but it has come back with a vengeance."
        
       Multiple factors are contributing to the outbreak, she said, including
       social determinants of health such as poverty and systemic racism in
       health care, dating apps that help arrange casual sexual encounters,
       and people having unprotected sex.
        
       Singh's clinical trial, which ran from August 2020 to February 2022,
       used rapid tests from two manufacturers. The device made by Biolytical
       Laboratories received the green light from Health Canada.
        
       The test checks blood droplets for antibodies of the infections with a
       finger stick — similar to a blood-sugar test for diabetics — and
       results appear within minutes, Singh said. They differ from most
       syphilis tests, which send blood samples to a lab and yield results
       within several days.
        
       The success of the trial led to rapid test use expanding in Alberta:
       18 community sites and six acute-care hospital sites use them, she
       said.
        
       The grant from CIHR, a federal agency that funds health research,
       allows her to continue the work in the AHS Central Zone by
       collaborating with Maskwacis Health Centre to figure out non-
       traditional ways to offer testing.
        
       _**LISTEN | Cases of syphilis continue to rise:**_
        
       Radio Active164:10:00Cases of syphilis continue to rise
        
       \nWe hear how a rapid test here in Alberta might help slow it down
       from Ameeta Singh, a clinical professor with the division of
       infectious diseases at the University of Alberta.
        
       "Instead of having people come into a health centre or hospital for
       testing, it would be nice if we could go out to them — perhaps using
       mobile vans or events — and offer this testing as part of a range or a
       group of other health interventions," Singh said.
        
       The Maskwacis Health Centre has already been doing point-of-care
       testing for over a year, which has allowed patients to start treatment
       and contact tracing sooner, said CEO Randy Littlechild.
        
       "They can actually start the treatment process right then and there,"
       Littlechild said, noting that a blood sample is still sent to a lab to
       confirm the rapid test results.
        
       "You could start the backward process of finding out who the [sexual]
       partner was… and, hopefully, in some of those cases, then you try to
       get those people to get tested as well and then they get treatment."
        
       Singh and her team are also partnering with an acute-care hospital in
       the AHS Central Zone to help provide testing to pregnant women, she
       said.
        
       This is in response to health ministry reporting, she said, which
       flagged that many of the women giving birth to babies with congenital
       syphilis were examined in an acute-care centre, but weren't tested for
       the infection.
        
        
        
        
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